
Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music Al Stewart Available Now
One of our good customers had this to say about a Hot Stamper pressing he purchased recently:
Hi Tom,
Well, I said that I would report back to you when I had listened to “Past, Present and Future,” and listen to it I did on Saturday evening.
Now, I have been listening to my copy of this record since it was released in 1973 and, I would say, that it is one of those rare records that sounds better every time I make an upgrade to my audio system (currently this is all vacuum tube – phono amp, pre-amp and power amps) – unlike some seemingly great sounding records that actually sound worse.
So, how do these two records compare? Well, when I played the “new” record, with great trepidation I might add, I noticed that the opening twenty seconds or so, that feature the guitars, were ever so slightly leaner sounding than my original copy. But, once the record got going, the sound of the “new” record opened up more that my original; the soundstage was bigger – slightly wider and deeper and, instrument and vocal placement was more tangible.
Dare I say that the dreaded compression was absent – something that even my original has a little of. Vocals on both were very strong but pretty inseparable.
I should state here and now, that I am a “soundqualityaholic” – I have records that I love to bits but don’t play because they sound so bad – “Silver Machine” by Hawkwind on a 12 inch single, springs to mind. And, Thomas by name, doubting by nature, although I understand and agree with your philosophy, I was very doubtful that the “new” copy of “Past, Present and Future” would better my original but, I was wrong. In fact, if I had to score these two records on sound quality, I would score my original at 90% and the “new” record at 95%.
Anyway, that’s about the size of it, as we say on this side if the “Pond”. So, I will close with my wife Jan’s words ringing in my ears – “worth every penny!” she said.
Best regards
Tom
Dear Tom,
The copy of Past Present you bought was $150 plus shipping. Can a five percent improvement in sound really be worth the roughly $200 you paid?
We love the idea that our pressing earned a 95% rating. It was a White Hot Shootout Winner, so 95 out of 100 seems to be about right. Could we find a copy that was 5% better than the best one we found last year? Of course we could.








